The title of the site is "Open Science". How does the site define "science" and is such a definition important for describing and managing the site?

Science is sometimes used to mean a method of inquiry (as in the scientific method), but it also can carry a connotation of describing only certain disciplines (e.g., "science" versus "social science"). Does "open science" refer to specific methods or disciplines?

Digital humanities is likely to have a lot in common with open science, but it is neither explicitly open nor necessarily science. Does open science have a broadly encompassing scope that would include this or does it leave out non-scientific approaches and/or non-scientific disciplines?

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3 Answers

I would argue for being inclusive of any discipline that uses a rigorous intellectual framework for analyzing empirical data and (possibly) drawing drawing conclusions from those data. By this definition, I think digital humanities and social sciences would be welcome in the discussion. Other disciplines like philosophy and theology may indeed have rigorous intellectual frameworks, but don't seem to involve any data analysis (or if they do, it seems to be more applied social science).

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Instead of defining the term science alone, I think it would be better to address directly what we mean with "Open science", which might be applicable to a subset of science or define some independent concepts. There is already a Wikipedia definition for it. So the discussion would be about that and we should also draw from and contribute to the page.

Ask Open Science used to be called Open Science Q&A but we changed the name when we registered the domain ask-open-science.org. Everything else stays the same: We are still hosted by Bielefeld University Library.